Article pubs.acs.org/Organometallics
Photofragmentation of Gas-Phase Lanthanide Cyclopentadienyl Complexes: Experimental and Time-Dependent Excited-State Molecular Dynamics Jiangchao Chen, Andrew M. Hochstatter, Dmitri Kilin, P. Stanley May, Qingguo Meng,* and Mary T. Berry* Department of Chemistry, University of South Dakota, Vermillion, South Dakota 57069, United States S Supporting Information *
ABSTRACT: Unimolecular gas-phase laser-photodissociation reaction mechanisms of open-shell lanthanide cyclopentadienyl complexes, Ln(Cp)3 and Ln(TMCp)3, are analyzed from experimental and computational perspectives. The most probable pathways for the photoreactions are inferred from photoionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (PI-TOF-MS), which provides the sequence of reaction intermediates and the distribution of final products. Time-dependent excited-state molecular dynamics (TDESMD) calculations provide insight into the electronic mechanisms for the individual steps of the laser-driven photoreactions for Ln(Cp)3. Computational analysis correctly predicts several key reaction products as well as the observed branching between two reaction pathways: (1) ligand ejection and (2) ligand cracking. Simulations support our previous assertion that both reaction pathways are initiated via a ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (LMCT) process. For the more complex chemistry of the tetramethylcyclopentadienyl complexes Ln(TMCp)3, TMESMD is less tractable, but computational geometry optimization reveals the structures of intermediates deduced from PI-TOF-MS, including several classic “tuck-in” structures and products of Cp ring expansion. The results have important implications for metal−organic catalysis and laser-assisted metal− organic chemical vapor deposition (LCVD) of insulators with high dielectric constants.
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observed, and the films, deposited at 250 °C, contained